Hi,

On Tue, Dec 23, 2014 at 12:04:25AM -0200, Henrique Lengler wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> I decided to install openbsd by the first time a month ago, How I
> was with no internet
> connection I needed to shutdown the computer in the part that I need
> to download the packages,
> because I hadn't it on the cd. I could not acess the command line so
> I clicked the reset button
> on the front panel. When I tried to turn on again, the system didn't
> boot. I discovered that it
> only worked if I remove the hard drive.
> Thinking that the problem was the harddrive I sent it to warranty to
> be repleaced. I took
> 10 long days (withou my computer) to arrive a new one.
> When it arrived, I tested and I saw that now it is working. I
> prepared a cable connection, and I
> started again the openbsd setup.
> It sucefully downloaded and installed everything, so I rebooted the
> system to boot my new fresh install.
> AND SHIT, everything happened as before, the system don't boot as
> before, I can't open the bios as before, and
>  I got really mad.
> 
> I don't know if I will be able to sent it to warranty again, but
> this isn't the right thing to do now that
>  I discovered that the problem isn't with it, the problem is with
> Openbsd.
> 
> Could someone please explain me why this happened? Can you think
> about a way to fix this without send it to warranty?
> Any other questions? send me a reply, I'm really in need of help
> 
> -- 
> Henrique Lengler
> 

Please send us the model, brand etc of your pc. This would be helpful
for everyone. 

Also my own experience with EFI and secureboot systems show unable to
detect a openbsd installation. Only when "bios" is set to CSM or CSM an
UEFI OS (Samsung AtivPro type) it will see a bootable OpenBSD disk. 

Please send us this type of information. Without it it would be guesing
1000's possible issues.

Regards

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